Environment-Controlled Postsynthetic Modifications of Iron Formate

Jun 18, 2019 - Faculty of Chemistry, Adam Mickiewicz University, Uniwersytetu Poznańskiego 8, 61-614 ... Because of the self-contained reaction space...
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Cite This: Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

Environment-Controlled Postsynthetic Modifications of Iron Formate Frameworks Szymon Sobczak and Andrzej Katrusiak* Faculty of Chemistry, Adam Mickiewicz University, Uniwersytetu Poznańskiego 8, 61-614 Poznań, Poland

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S Supporting Information *

ABSTRACT: New, hybrid iron-formate perovskites have been obtained in high-pressure reactions. In addition to the pressure range, the liquid environment of the sample also regulates the course of transformations. Formate α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 (Dma = (CH3)2NH2+, For = HCOO−), when compressed in oil or in isopropanol at 1.40 GPa, transforms to a new phase γ, different than that obtained at low-temperature (phase β). In glycerol, phase α can be compressed to 1.40 GPa, but then it reacts to DmaFe2+For3, with all Fe(III) cations reduced, surrounded by amorphous iron formate devoid of Dma cations. Another mixed-valence framework Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2 can be produced from phase α incubated in methanol and ethanol at 1.15 GPa. These pressure-induced environment-sensitive modifications have been rationalized by the volume effects in transforming structures, their different chemical composition, voids, ligands, and cation oxidation states switching between Fe(II), Fe(III), their high- and low-spin states, as well as solubility, molecular size, and the chemical and physical properties of the pressure transmitting media. The topochemical redox paths controlled by pressure and the liquid environment offer new highly efficient, safe, and environment-friendly reactions leading to new advanced materials and their postsynthetic modifications.



INTRODUCTION The hybrid inorganic−organic frameworks display various attractive properties, which depend on the cations, linkers, their connectivity, topology, as well as the size and chemical character of surfaces in the voids.1−13 In these multifunctional materials, the manifold functionalities lead to new cross-effects of higher order, both physical and chemical in nature. Particularly interesting are postsynthetic modifications (PSM) of metal−organic frameworks (MOFs).14−30 The PSM can be used for fabricating in situ, under specific conditions, new materials with required properties. The PSM solid-state transitions and reactions are often initiated by physical stimuli. Because of the self-contained reaction space, requiring no additional substrates, the PSM can be invaluable for green technologies and for obtaining sophisticated advanced materials on requested sites. These topochemical reactions can be stimulated by light, temperature and pressure.31−35 The typical high-pressure effects, such as tighter molecular packing, increased density, compressed coordination bonds, shorter distances to the ligands, and modified crystal field−all can destabilize material structure.36−39 Several rules were formulated for describing the pressure effects in various compounds, including elements and minerals by Prewitt and Downs.40 Their Rule Number 4 states that the coordination number increases with pressure, and Rule 5 is that the nonmetal atoms (usually oxygen in minerals) are stronger compressed than cations.40,41 Most recently, we showed that these rules also describe the effects of pressure on © XXXX American Chemical Society

the coordination polymers (CPs) and porous MOFs: the increased coordination number in the high-pressure phases of CPs originates from the stronger compression of anions compared to central cations, and this rule can be extended to the temperature dependence of time-averaged volumes of central and ligand atoms.42 Hence, the inverse relationship between the pressure and temperature effects was observed in numerous reactions and transformations of CPs.42−56 Presently, we further explore the pressure-induced PSMs. By choosing the mixed-valence perovskite-like iron-formate framework with dimethylamine cations (Dma), we have introduced into the system additional instabilities of low-spin and high-spin states, the oxidation changes between Fe2+ and Fe3+ cations and possible relocation, disproportionation, and reactions involving the formate and amine ions. The strongly increased energy of interactions can result in electronic transitions, spin-state changes, and even in redox reactions. Spin crossover (SC) phenomena in transition-metal compounds under pressure were reviewed by Drickamer et al.57,58 Since then, the SC transformations have been observed in many complexes of divalent and trivalent iron, cobalt, nickel, chromium, and manganese.42 However, to our knowledge, no pressure-promoted SC transformations coupled to the redox reactions in MOFs have been reported. Here, we describe Received: June 18, 2019

A

DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817 Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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Inorganic Chemistry several high-pressure transformations involving electronic transformations for compound [(CH 3 ) 2 NH 2 + ][Fe 2+ Fe 3+ (HCOO−)6], hereafter denoted as α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 (Figure 1). Moreover, we have observed that the PSMs of iron formates strongly depend on their liquid environments.

Figure 2. Bonds Fe−O in iron formates compressed in different media. The color code of highlights correspond to that in Figure 1; triangles up, down and circles indicate the Fe(II)HS, Fe(III)HS and mixed, respectively. The iron oxidation state for Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12· CO2 is the average of 3:1 of Fe(II): Fe(III).

pression, as well as the electronic transitions and strains generated at anomalous transformations of the crystal. The structural features of the starting material are essential for understanding its PSMs. The ambient-pressure hybrid perovskite α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6, of trigonal space group P31c (Table 1), is stable in different hydrostatic media nearly up to 1.40 GPa. As previously reported,59,60 all iron cations in αDmaFe2+Fe3+For6 are octahedrally coordinated by formate anions in anti−anti configuration. Every second cavity of the framework is occupied by the Dma cation, and every other is empty. At ambient pressure, above 155 K,59,60 the Dma cation is disordered in this way that the two methyls reside on the 3fold axis and around the axis, the nitrogen atom is distributed between three equivalent sites. Below 155 K, the onset of the ordering of Dma cations breaks the symmetry and transforms the crystal to phase β of space group R3c.61,62 Monotonic Compression of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6. The high-pressure behavior of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 by itself is quite unique. Up to 1.0 GPa, phase α is hardly compressed along plane (001) and then, up to 1.40 GPa, it displays the extremely rare effect of negative area compressibility (NAC)56,63−66 (Figure 3). On approaching the phase transition at 1.40 GPa both the NAC along plane (001) and the strong linear compression along [001] increase; between the ambient pressure and 1.40 GPa, parameter c of the hexagonal cell is reduced by about 1 Å. Despite this strong lattice strain, the structural changes are relatively small: the Fe···Fe distances are compressed from 5.889 Å at 0.1 MPa to 5.768 Å in 1.25 GPa; in this pressure range the O−C−O angle in formates increases by 1.38°, similarly as it was reported in compressed DmaNiFor3, DmaCoFor3,67 DmaCuFor3, DmaFeFor3, and DmaMnFor3.68 The magnetic properties of α-DmaFe 3+ Fe2+ For6 are consistent with high-spin configurations of the iron cations.60

Figure 1. Schematic diagram of phase transformations and reactions of iron formates at various conditions. Double arrows mark the reversible transformations.



DISCUSSION In the α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 framework, each Fe(III) cation is surrounded by six octahedrally arranged Fe(II), each of which is likewise surrounded by six Fe(III) cations. Bonds Fe(II)−O and Fe(III)−O can be distinguished by their length, 2.12 and 2.01 Å, respectively, as the Fe(II) cation, is richer in one electron and hence larger than Fe(III). We have established for a series of iron formates the bond-length difference of about 0.1 Å between Fe(II)−O and Fe(III)−O is hardly affected by the pressure up to 1.2 GPa. Whereas the continuous compression reduces the Fe−O bond distance by less than 1% GPa−1, the electronic transition between Fe(II) and Fe(III), as well as the SC transition, result in over 10% Fe−O distance changes. Depending on the pressure range and solvent, αDmaFe2+Fe3+For6 transforms its framework and electronic states of the iron cations in three different ways (Figure 1). The different ionic radii in ferric and ferrous cations make the Fe−O distances highly responsive to the pressure changes. The observed changes in Fe−O bond distances, illustrated for selected iron formates in Figure 2, are the consequences of structural strains accumulated during the monotonic comB

DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817 Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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Inorganic Chemistry Table 1. Selected Crystallographic Data of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6, γ-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6, and DmaFe2+For3a α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 formula medium pressure crystal system space group a (Å) b (Å) c (Å) β (deg) V (Å3)

+

α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 +

[(CH3)2NH2 ] [Fe3+Fe2+(HCOO−)6] air 0.1 MPa59,60 trigonal P3̅1c 8.2512(11)

[(CH3)2NH2 ] [Fe3+Fe2+(HCOO−)6] Daphne, isopropanol 1.40 GPa trigonal P3̅1c 8.2737(4)

13.846(3)

12.9287(4)

816.374(2)

766.45(5)

γ-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 +

[(CH3)2NH2 ] [Fe3+Fe2+(HCOO−)6] Daphne, isopropanol 1.50 GPa monoclinic P21/c 8.353(3) 14.119(3) 36.091(3) 90.681(12) 4256.0(18)

DmaFe2+For3 [(CH3)2NH2+] [Fe2+(HCOO−)3] glycerol 1.40 GPa trigonal R3̅c 8.153(7) 21.913(3) 1262(2)

a

See Tables S5−S8.

Figure 3. Changes in the unit-cell parameters of (a) α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 compressed in Daphne 7474, isopropanol, methanol, and glycerol up to 1.40 GPa and then γ-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 compressed in Daphne 7474 and isopropanol; and (b) the compression of DmaFe2+For3 formed above 1.40 GPa in glycerol (full symbols) and of DmaFe2+For3 synthesized at ambient conditions (open symbols).68,69 The insets graphically represent the strain tensors of the crystals at the low-pressure limit of their stability regions.70

The configuration of electrons in the partly filled 3d shell affects not only the potential energy and size of the cation, but also its reactivity. According to Hund’s rule, the electronic configuration of maximum-multiplicity (highest-spin) is favored. Thus, the ferrous cation Fe(II) adopts the outer shell 3d64s°, and it changes to 3d54s° for the cation reduced to ferric Fe(III). Both these cations can further differentiate into high-spin or low-spin states. The high-spin ferric state, with five orbitals, each containing one electron, is spherical (6A1). The high-spin ferrous state is in an asymmetric (5T2) ground state. On the other hand, the low-spin ferrous state is spherically symmetric (1A1), while the low-spin ferric state (2T2) is not. In compressed high-spin α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6, the ligand field increases and the interelectronic repulsion (Racah parameter) decreases.71 Thus, on one hand, the high-pressure increases the energy of all orbitals; and on the other, the interelectronic repulsion can be reduced by the spin-pairing energy. The lower energy of interelectronic interactions of the antiparallel spins, consistent with Pauling’s principle, can also be associated with the reduction of the volume of electronic orbitals, with the reduction of ionic and atomic radii. These effects combine the high/low-spin transitions with the pressure

stimuli. Other external stimuli, such as temperature and pH of the solvent, can further affect the ligand field. Such combined effects can cumulate for triggering phase transitions and topochemical reactions. Generally, the coordinating electronegative atoms or anions are larger and stronger compressed than cations. Consequently, high-pressure usually favors the equilibrium of smaller anions and neutral structural units, even when achieved at the cost of a small increase of the cations volume (Figure 4). Moreover, the pressure can trigger a composition change reducing the overall volume of the crystals and its environment, treated as a whole system. The volume reduction can be achieved either by phase transitions or topochemical reactions. For example, it was shown that high-pressure, through chemical reactions, promotes the reduced oxidation states in the series of oxides Fe2O3, Fe3O4, Fe4O5, Fe5O7, Fe7O9, and FeO.57,58,71−75 For the iron formates under this study, the oxidation states of the Fe cations are the derivative of the crystal structure, ligands conformation, voids and of the compounds composition and its possible changes. Several types of pressure-induced transformations of iron formates reported in the literature,76−79 and our present results, C

DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817 Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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Figure 4. Monotonic and anomalous compression schematically illustrated for a crystal (the closed thermodynamic system), where at the transformation point, the overall volume drop of the crystal (red line) is mainly due to the ligands, voids, and dislocated guests. A subsystem of iron cations (green) can display a negative volume compression, fully compensated by the larger volume compression of the other subsystems. The dashed line marks critical pressure Pc.

illustrate the interplay of various structural components and their compressed environment. Compression in Oil and in Isopropanol. At 1.40 GPa, α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 reversibly transforms to phase γ, of monoclinic space group P21/c (Figure 2, Table 1). In phase γ, the FeO6 octahedra are distorted due to the Fe−O bonds and O···O distances significantly different in the strained structure (Figure 5). However, the structural dimensions, chemical composition and the distribution of Fe−O distances, all are consistent with the retained oxidation state Fe2+Fe3+ in phase γ. The transition to phase γ has the character of both order−disorder (it halts the rotations of Dma cations) and reconstructive (every sixth formate anion changes its configuration from anti−anti to anti−syn) transformation. Figure 5 illustrates the main features of phases α and γ: the binding conformation of HCOO− linkers; disordered (phase α) and ordered (phase γ) Dma cations occupying every second cage of the perovskite structure (occupied cages are marked blue/gray; empty ones purple/yellow); and the presence of independent cages. The anti−syn configuration considerably reduces the volume of two-thirds of the empty cages in phase γ (Figures 5 and 6). In this way, 1/3 of all cages in the crystal in phase γ are empty and collapsed, while 1/6 of all cages are empty and remain open; the remaining 1/2 of all cages is filled by ordered Dma cations. This volume reduction effect is absent at ambient pressure and the transition between phases α and β (at 155 K) is purely of the order−disorder type. Squeezing Dma off α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 in Glycerol. In glycerol, α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 is compressed like in Daphne oil and isopropanol up to 1.4 GPa (Figure 3), but then several spectacular macroscopic effects are clearly visible (Figure 7). The black single crystal of phase α gradually changes its shape and becomes transparent between the crystal surface and the dark central part. This color change of the outer part and its multigrain texture is clearly different from α-to-γ phase transition. On releasing pressure the transparent region is reduced until the sample is fully black again. This process could be repeated several times, after which the initial sharp edges of the sample become first rounded and next shattered.

Figure 5. Structural features of DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 phases. (Top) Schematic representations of the formate coordination configurations anti−anti (marked green) and in anti−syn (blue), as well as of phase α (left) projected down direction [100]α and of phase γ (right) projected in corresponding direction [100]γ. The cages occupied with Dma are colored blue and gray; the empty cages are purple and yellow. (Bottom) Capped-sticks models of the structures projected along the direction [001], collinear in phases α and γ.

The X-ray diffraction measurements confirmed that in glycerol phase α is compressed like in Daphne oil and isopropanol, but then a sudden transformation takes place to a new phase (Figure S1). Only one single-crystal diffraction pattern was present above 1.40 GPa, despite that, two different (transparent-outer and dark-internal) phases were clearly visible. By solving the crystal structure of the new diffraction pattern, we found that this is DmaFe2+For3 (Table 1), of trigonal space group R3c. DmaFe2+For3 was synthesized before at ambient pressure and it forms transparent crystals,80 and it could be an indication that the transparent-outer part of the sample corresponds to the new compound (Figure 7). The compression of DmaFe2+For3 was measured by Collings et al.,69 and it is consistent with our measurements in glycerol in all the pressure range (Figure 2). However, in our experiment, the DmaFe2+For3 crystal disappears below 1.40 GPa and αDmaFe2+Fe3+For6 appears again. It is apparent that the pressure-induced topochemical reaction in the single crystal of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 compressed in glycerol leads to at least two products, one of which we have identified by X-ray diffraction as DmaFe2+For3 and others are amorphous or in the form of fine powder, as no D

DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817 Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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unidentified phase X, deprived of all Dma (most likely either Fe3+For3 or Fe2+For2·For·), which may further transform into the Fe2+For2 framework, where each For anion coordinates three Fe(II) cations. Such a structure of the collapsed Fe2+For2 framework at ambient conditions was determined by Wang et al.81 Despite these strong changes in the structure and in properties, we observed that the reaction is reversible (Figure 7). It implies that the transforming regions are capable of transporting the Dma cations, resulting in the reconstruction of the original phase α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 on the release of pressure. Irreversible CO2-Templated Reaction in MeOH and EtOH. We detected no signs of anomalous behavior for αDmaFe2+Fe3+For6 compressed in methanol and ethanol to about 1.10 GPa. However, at 1.15 GPa, the crystal slowly dissolved and small cubic prisms precipitated (Figure 8). We

Figure 6. Compression of the unit-cell volume per one iron atom in iron-formates with half of the cages empty (DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 phases α and γ) and all cages filled (DmaFe2+For3 and Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12· CO2). Different pressure transmitting media are indicated by symbols described in the legend.

Figure 8. Chemical reaction of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 compressed in methanol: (left) the DAC chamber with one single crystal of phase α and a ruby chip for pressure calibration on its left edge, after increasing pressure to 1.08 GPa at 296 K; (middle) after 2 days of gradually increasing pressure to 1.15 GPa; and (right) incubated for another 5 days, the chamber filled by many small crystals of Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2 (green in the transmitting light). Figure 7. Single crystal of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 compressed in glycerol. It gradually becomes transparent above 1.40 GPa (a, b). The reverse reaction (c) after the pressure was released, as indicated by the presence of small air bubbles. Several small ruby chips lie close to the edge of the diamond anvil cell (DAC) chamber.

recovered them to ambient pressure and established by X-ray diffraction that they are formed of Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2. Their cubic symmetry of space group Im3, and the structure (Table 2) are analogous to a group of metal M(III) formates of Table 2. New Iron Formate Obtained under High-Pressure (this work, see Table S9) Compared to the Analogous Crystal Synthesized in Hydrothermal Conditions by Tian et al.83

other diffraction pattern was observed. This reaction can be described by the equation 1.40 GPa glycerol

α‐DmaFe 2 +Fe3 +For6 ←⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯→ DmaFe 2 +For3 + X

formula

where X can be either Fe3+For3 or Fe2+For2·For· (For· stands for a radical form of formate ligand). According to Drickamer et al.,71 with increasing pressure the energy of 3d orbitals (placed against the ligand orbitals) lowers, at the same time increasing iron affinity for electrons. The formate anions possessing empty π orbitals can bond to the (filled) t2g(π) orbitals of the metal atom by the backdonation of metal electrons. The reduction of iron is accomplished at the point when the electron from a nonbonding ligand orbital is transferred to the metal 3d antibonding orbital. This reduction can lead either to a form of free radical formed at a ligand site or to an electron−hole circulating between the adjacent ligands.71 It is plausible that above 1.40 GPa on the crystal surface of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 all cages in framework collapse and the Dma cations are extruded toward the crystal center, where they fill in the empty (every second) cages, simultaneously with the reduction of adjacent cations Fe(III) to Fe(II). This mechanism implies that at the sample center, the single crystal of DmaFe2+For3 is surrounded by the transition zone of

synthesis cryst. system space group a (Å) V (Å3) Z/Z′ Dx (g cm−3)

Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2

Fe3+4(HCOO−)12·3CO2·H2O· HCOOH hydrothermal 423 K for 24 h83

0.9−1.2 GPa 269 K for 120 h cubic

cubic

Im3 12.0752(4) 1760.68(10) 8/0.1666671/6 1.723

Im3 11.7697(11) 1630.4(3) 8/0.166667 1.861

general formula [M 3 + (HCOO − ) 3 ·3/4CO 2 ·1/4H 2 O· 1/4HCOOH], where M = Mn, Fe, Al, Ga, and In.82,83 They adopt the ReO3-type structure, built of FeO6 octahedra sharing formate anions at the vertices. The neutral CO2 molecules and Dma cations trapped in the cages equilibrate the 3:1 ratio of Fe2+ and Fe3+ cations (Figure 9). It appears that the main reason for the different effect of methanol and ethanol is that they better dissolve αDmaFe2+Fe3+For6 than isopropanol, Daphne oil, and glycerol. E

DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817 Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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CONCLUSIONS



EXPERIMENTAL SECTION

When exposed to different external stimuli, the hybrid ironformate perovskite α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 displays a variety of transformations. Different phase transitions are induced by temperature and pressure. However, the most striking different chemical reactions are caused by the pressure in conjugation with different surrounding liquids. Three different types of transformations have been observed: classical order−disorder and displacive reversible thermodynamic transitions (between phases α, β, and γ); reversible chemical reaction (yielding DmaFe2+For3 and Fe2+For2); as well as irreversible reaction leading to Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2 involving reduction of formates. The physical and chemical effects leading to these transformations include the work term of the Gibbs free energy (∂G/∂p) involving the volume changes between low/high-spin electron configurations, disorder and onsets of ordering of Dma cations, changes in oxidation state of iron, disproportionation of charges, configuration of coordination bonds, pressure-increased catalyst effect of iron, molecular size of liquid pressure transmitting media, their dissolving properties, etc. All these effects can be applied for planning the PSMs. Most importantly, this study on α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 and its PSM products has revealed a variety of transformations and reactions that broaden the general understanding about the chemistry in extreme conditions, and in particular, the subtle effects most relevant to soft and highly sensitive hybrid metal− organic perovskites.

Figure 9. Cubic structure of Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2 with Dma and CO2 caged in the 3-dimensional framework. Two types of cages, one of site symmetry mmm and the other m3, result in highly disordered Dma and CO2, respectively. The Dma H-atoms are omitted for clarity.

Consequently, phase α dissolves and some formates decompose to CO2 and H2. This reaction involves an electron transfer from the formate nonbonding level to the metal dπ orbitals, according to 4α‐DmaFe 2 +Fe3 +For6 + 2For + 2Dma

Synthesis of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6. Black single crystal of αDmaFe2+Fe3+For6 was synthesized according to the procedure reported by Zhao et al.59 One gram of the FeCl3·6H2O crystals were dissolved in a mixture of DMF and 88% formic acid and heated at 140 °C for several days in an autoclave.89 After that, black crystals of DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 were mechanically separated, washed, and dried. The Dma cations caged in the formate framework come from the hydrolysis of DMF used as the solvent for the reaction. Synthesis of Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2. Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12· CO2 was synthesized from α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 compressed to 1.15 GPa in methanol or ethanol. During 5 days, the phase α crystal gradually dissolved and the reaction yielded small green cubic crystals (Figure S4). Single-crystal X-ray measurements were performed on a SuperNova diffractometer with a microfocus source (Cu Kα = 1.54178 Å) revealed that the new product is Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12· CO2 (detailed structural data from ambient and low-temperature structural measurements are located in Table S9). Crystallographic Information Files (including low-temperature measurements) have been deposited in the Cambridge Structural Database (CCDC, www. ccdc.cam.ac.uk) with numbers CCDC 1893002−1893006. High-Pressure Structural Measurements. A black trigonal single crystal of the α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 has been mounted in a Merrill-Bassett diamond anvil cell (DAC) chamber,90 then filled with isopropanol, Daphne 7474 oil, glycerol, methanol, and ethanol and isothermally compressed. The pressure inside the DAC was calibrated by the ruby-fluorescence method.91,92 The gaskets of 0.3 mm stainless steel foil with spark-eroded holes 0.5 mm in diameter were used. The DAC was centered by the gasket-shadow method.93 The compression of crystals was measured by single-crystal X-ray diffraction on Xcalibur Eos-CCD and Kuma Eos-CCD 4-circle diffractometers (Mo Kα = 0.71073 Å). The optimum diffractometer settings for measuring the reflection intensities were applied.94 Crystallographic data were collected and preliminarily reduced with the CrysAlisPro, version 1.171.33.95 The structure was solved by direct methods in program Shelxs and refined with Shelxl using the Olex2 suite.96−98 The final crystal data are summarized in Tables 1 and 2 (see Tables S5−S8) and obtained Crystallographic Information Files have been deposited

1.15 GPa CH3OH C2H5OH

⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯→ 2Dma3Fe32 +Fe3 +For12·CO2 + H 2

The crystal structure of Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2 is similar to that of DmaFe2+For3 in this respect that all cages are filled. However, in Dma3Fe2+3Fe3+For12·CO2, every fourth cage are filled with the neutral CO2 molecule. It is known that many formate salts of the general formula MFor(H2O)x are prone to decarboxylation. For example, hydrated nickel formate decarboxylases at about 473 K, yielding the fine powder of pure metallic nickel.84 Moreover, the catalytic effect of Fe(BF4)2·6H2O for the dehydrogenation of formic acid is highly efficient.85 Environment effects on α-DmaFe3+Fe2+For6. Our experiments have revealed that α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 is highly sensitive to the liquid medium used for the compression. Clearly, three different transformations of α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 can be discriminated for the sample compressed in (a) Daphne oil 7474 and isopropanol, (b) glycerol, and (c) methanol and ethanol. These liquids are different in several respects, and it appears that their most significant properties are molecular volume, viscosity, and the hydrostatic limit.86−88 The liquids also differ in the types of intermolecular interactions with the walls of cages and the crystal; surfaces. All these properties affect the penetration of molecules into the framework.87 The highly viscous Daphne 7474 and isopropanol consist of large molecules, unlikely to penetrate the α-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6 structure. It appears that glycerol is similar, but it is much more hydrophilic in interactions. Finally, small molecules of methanol and ethanol can penetrate the pores and, in this way, affect the compression. F

DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817 Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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Inorganic Chemistry in the CCDC with numbers 1892942−1892949, 1892963 (for αDmaFe2+Fe3+For6), 1892964−1892966 (for γ-DmaFe2+Fe3+For6), and 1892970−1892973 (for DmaFe2+For3). The high-pressure experiments were repeated several times each to eliminate possible other reasons of different transitions and reactions.



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ASSOCIATED CONTENT

S Supporting Information *

The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website at DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817. Selected X-ray diffraction layers hkl reconstructed for the experiments at 1.00 and 1.40 GPa in glycerol; a schematic representation of the hp-DmaFe2+For3 crystal; detailed compressibility data for α-DmaFe3+Fe2+For6, γDmaFe3+Fe2+For6, and hp-DmaFe2+For3; photographs of the products recovered after redox reactions in methanol; and tables with site symmetry of the Fe atoms for all phases and detailed crystallographic data (PDF) Accession Codes

CCDC 1892942−1892949, 1892963, 1892970−1892973, and 1893002−1893006 contain the supplementary crystallographic data for this paper. These data can be obtained free of charge via www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif, or by emailing [email protected], or by contacting The Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre, 12 Union Road, Cambridge CB2 1EZ, UK; fax: +44 1223 336033.



AUTHOR INFORMATION

Corresponding Author

*E-mail: [email protected]. ORCID

Szymon Sobczak: 0000-0001-8234-2503 Andrzej Katrusiak: 0000-0002-1439-7278 Author Contributions

The manuscript was written through contributions of all authors. Funding

This study was supported by project OPUS 10 UMO-2015/ 19/B/ST5/00262 from the Polish National Science Centre. S.S. also thanks to the EU European Social Fund, Operational Program Knowledge Education Development, for Grant POWR.03.02.00-00-I023/17. Notes

The authors declare no competing financial interest.

■ ■

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Authors are grateful to Ms. Dominika Czerwonka for valuable discussions. REFERENCES

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DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01817 Inorg. Chem. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX